Oh Damn, I'm gonna have to go back to page 1. Looking forward to it though!
I have ridden with @snuffnwhisky and @joeymt33 at Coalmont (Yamaha) and Mulberry (white lightning), but did not ask to ride in white lightning for fear of being ruined with ole Nellie.... lol. But if you got the time, I will take you up on the offer if we meet at some point. No doubt, Snuffnwhisky abilities and skills leaves me just shaking my head in awe.If you ride with us you can take it for a spin, but I warn you I drove @snuffnwhisky machine and it left me wanting to steal White Lightning.
Ride improvement without the shocks fully tuned is like going from a 500 to a 1000 with the aftermarket shocks. Its still not comparable to a sport machine, I'm not going to compare it that way, but I believe the ride at slower speeds is better than a Talon, but different design parameters. It would be like saying a flexi rock crawling CJ7 is comparable to a trophy truck because they have the same amount of travel and maybe even HP. I wouldn't try to run it around a track or through rough terrain at high speed like a sport machine although I have taken White Lightning for a spin around a track. Arms are WAY to beefy for that, too much weight. I think the frame would be damaged before the arms would. Snuff did an amazing job with the design and setup considering he was working with a "farm rig". Yes I am coddling his ego partly because he deserves it mostly because I still need his help.
The LT pioneers are impressive... a s*** TON of work!! But impressive!
That seemed to be a really long, steep downhill!Well since Joey is showing you Traveller II.0
I’ll share a few videos.
I was actually holding an open Coke going up the hill in the third clip and I didn’t spill it.
Before you give me crap for using a winch, I was solo, unfamiliar with the limits of the machine, testing shocks, DCT programming, and limited on time so I didn’t take any chances.
Rear shocks need to be revalved, DCT programming sorted out, and steering tweaked to account for excess toe-in at full droop,
That seemed to be a really long, steep downhill!
Very nice upgrades @ohanacreek
Why do u hang your fire extinguisher upside down?Camping/Overland
Several Takeovers back @Koda had a jeep drawer mounted in his machine, I liked it but it didn't take up as much of the bed and provide what I felt was the most usable space. I have been wanting to build one for a while now and I finally got around to it after I tried for a year to make Ridgid Toold boxes work the way I wanted them to. While I really like the Ridgid setup there was a lot of wasted space when camping and they were stacked so high it was comical. I never could get to what I needed to easily and they were a pain to get in and out quickly. I ended up using the frame I had made for the Ridgid boxes to mount in the bed without the rear seats (the rear seats and seatbelt weight around 100-110lbs. I have small children so they need seats that have their own built in harnesses and I use several ratchet straps to secure the seats to the factory seats without the cushions. The factory seats can be installed or removed in about 10mins once you do it the first time.
I built the frame and skinned it with HDPE, sealed it tight with silicone and used the face of the drawer with weather strip. I did not get any dust or water in the drawer which made me happy. I used the HDPE inside as dividers/bracing for the bottom of the drawer to reduce weight. All total the drawer and base frame weigh about as much as the rear seats and seatbelt so its a wash. It will only really get used for camping and long weekends.
As I was building it someone led me to Milwaukee Packouts and the mounting bases, man I wish I had just ponied up for that expensive red plastic the first go around. Then Milwaukee came out with Packout coolers, so again I sold the 8 Ridgid boxes and 26qt Ozark Trail cooler and mount off to offset an upgrade.
I bought two base plates and mounted them on top of the drawer. I picked up two small packout boxes one for tools and parts, and one as a first-aid kit. I hope that one is a waste of money but I got a buddy who is an EMT and was a Combat medic to set me up with a kit to take care of dang near anything. After looking and thinking I realized I could mount the coolers and tool boxes in the bed on the packout bases and have them permanently mounted under the drawer. So when its time to use the drawer remove the packout boxes/coolers, bolt the drawer to try frame and place the packout coolers and first aid kit on top. I do have to remove everything from the toolkit packout and place it in a bag at the front of the drawer to lower weight and place it toward the center of the machine. For long trips I have a place to strap a 2.5 gal SureCan down. I absolutely love the SureCans they do NOT LEAK at all not even vapors, and are easy to fill up the machine with. I will not buy another brand fuel can EVER.
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A while back @Ultrasonic1 posted an ARB awning (pn 814301) mounted to the rear of the machine and while I was removing weight with the wet sounds, rear bumper, rear seats, factory exhaust, and trimming down my tool and recovery kits. I added the 20lbs for this. They also had a side and back wall (side PN 813403 rear 813301) that I figured would be great for rainy camping. It should make for a nice wind/rain break for the drawer while I am setting up camp or cooking in camp. Only takes a min or two to setup and maybe double that to take down. The walls are in the center of the drawer. I did have to cut the factory roof to make it fit but I cut the front suspension off the machine earlier this year so... whats a $400 plastic roof at this point?
It is NICE on a hot summer day. We have used it a couple of times at my in-laws place on the river. ( I am not going to post pics of my girls on a public forum too many weirdos in the world)
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Why do u hang your fire extinguisher upside down?